According to Kenya's Daily Nation newspaper, Onyango said an ANPPCAN study had shown that trafficking often involved relatives who lured children from rural areas with promises of a better life and education in towns.
"This kind of exploitation is most prevalent in Malindi [costal town about 100km north of Mombasa], where children taken from as far as Suba district [in western Kenya] end up as prostitutes," ANPPCAN executive director Philista Onyango told a conference on human trafficking in the capital, Nairobi, on Thursday. "Others find their way into the United Kingdom and the Middle East, where they become domestic workers under conditions akin to slavery."
Kenyan Vice-President Moody Awori said the government was bringing local legislation in line with international conventions protecting the rights of children and women, and added that a Bill to deal with human trafficking was in the works.
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